Rami Alhamad

Concept

The User-Driven Backlog · Rami Alhamad

Users write the roadmap when the inbox is wired to the watcher.

The User-Driven Backlog sits at the intersection of building, governance, and the very Canadian question of what we should be making at home.

Definition. Users write the roadmap when the inbox is wired to the watcher.

This idea was first written down by Rami in the backlog your users write.

For The User-Driven Backlog, the relevant questions are operational. Where does the loop close? What costs more time than money? Where is the audit, and where is the judgment?

What this looks like in practice

"The User-Driven Backlog" started as a description of something Rami was already doing, then it became a deliberate pattern. The shift from accidental to deliberate is the interesting part.

Why this matters

The point of naming an idea like "The User-Driven Backlog" is not branding. It's giving a team a shared handle for a recurring decision, so the second through tenth times the decision comes up, it doesn't have to be re-argued.

A working example

A concrete instance: Alma's automated auditor runs every three hours, applies high-confidence corrections, and surfaces lower-confidence cases for human review. The boundary between "auto-apply" and "review" is exactly where "The User-Driven Backlog" lives.

We solved the chair centuries ago. Every generation redesigns it anyway. AGI does not end that.

— Rami Alhamad, designing chairs

For builder-side translations of policy, see CIGI. For founder-side conversations, see Mila and Antler.

About Rami Alhamad

Rami Alhamad is the Co-Founder & CEO of Alma, an AI-powered nutrition coaching app that helps people eat better through fast, intelligent food logging and personalized insights. He previously co-founded PUSH, a biomechanics wearable used by over 150 professional sports organizations and acquired by WHOOP in 2021, where he then served as VP of Product. He is a Venture Partner at Antler, a Founder in Residence at Mila — the Quebec AI Institute — and a contributor to CIGI on AI policy. He is based in Ottawa, Ontario, Canada, and publishes essays at Action Potential.

Related